A Sub-µW Tuneable Switched-Capacitor Amplifier-Filter for Neural Recording Using a Class-C Inverter
Authors
Abstract:
A two stage sub-µW Inverter-based switched-capacitor amplifier-filter is presented which is capable of amplifying both spikes and local field potentials (LFP) signals. Here we employ a switched capacitor technique for frequency tuning and reducing of 1/f noise of two stages. The reduction of power consumption is very necessary for neural recording devices however, in switched capacitor (SC) circuits OTA is a major building block that consumes most of the power. Therefore an OTA-less technique utilizing a class-C inverter is employed that significantly reduces the power consumption. A detailed analysis of noise performance for the inverter-based SC circuits is presented. A mathematical model useful for analysis of such SC integrators is derived and a good comparison is obtained between simulation and analytical technique. With a supply voltage of 0.7V and using 0.18 µm CMOS technology, this design can achieves a power consumption of about 538 nW. The designed amplifier-filter has the gains 18.6 dB and 28.2 dB for low pass only and cascaded filter, respectively. By applying different sampling frequencies, the filter attains a reconfigurable bandwidth.
similar resources
A Sub-μW Tuneable Switched-Capacitor Amplifier-Filter for Neural Recording using a Class-C Inverter
A two stage sub-μW Inverter-based switched-capacitor amplifier-filter is presented which is capable of amplifying both spikes and Local Field Potentials (LFP) signals. Here we employ a switched capacitor technique for frequency tuning and reducing of 1/f noise of two stages. The reduction of power consumption is very necessary for neural recording devices; however, in Switched Capacitor (SC) ci...
full textA Cmos Class-ab Transconductance Amplifier for Switched-capacitor Applications
A novel CMOS operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) is presented, using a fully differential singlestage core OTA as input stage and a differential to single current converter as output stage, each biased at a separate current level. A large gain-bandwidth (GBW) product (2.7 MHz) and a high slew-rate (5 V//.LS) can be obtained by applying a large bias current to the core OTA. Due to the c...
full textDesign Switched Capacitor Filter Sub Circuit Using Tanner EDA Tool
Switched Capacitor circuits are Pervasive in highly integrated, mixed signal Applications. Switched capacitor circuits fill a Critical role in analog/digital interfaces particularly highly integrated applications. This Chapter describes the basic building blocks that Comprise switched Capacitor circuits. These Blocks are the sample-and-hold (S/H), gain Stage. From these elements more complex Ci...
full textA Switched-Capacitor Band-Pass Biquad Filter Using a Simple Quasi-unity Gain Amplifier
This paper presents a switched-capacitor (SC) band-pass biquad using a simple quasi-unity gain amplifier. In sub-nanometer CMOS technologies the intrinsic gain of the transistors is low; this increases the difficulty of designing high gain amplifiers. The proposed SC filter is based on the Sallen-Key biquad and it requires only a simple low gain amplifier. A differential filter circuit, includi...
full textA 8.6 μW 3-bit programmable gain amplifier for multiplexed-input neural recording systems.
We report a fully-integrated low-power 3-bit programmable-gain amplifier (PGA) that can be used as the second stage amplifier to adjust the gain for multi-channel neural recording systems. The design strategy maximizes energy-efficiency using a technique by optimizing a slew rate, gain and phase margin. The PGA consumes 8.66 μW from 1-V single supply. This is an order of magnitude lower than th...
full textA 1.3μW 0.0075mm Neural Amplifier and Capacitor-Integrated Electrodes for High Density Neural Implant Recording
A key issue in the design of biomedical implants is the design of low-power area-efficient circuits that allow for highdensity neural recording. This paper presents an ultra low-power (<1.4μW ), area efficient low-noise neural amplifier that utilizes current-feedback miller-compensation technique and occupies <0.08mm silicon area. Integrating the large input capacitor within the electrodes save...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 9 issue 4
pages 224- 231
publication date 2013-12
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023